Graziano
Di Carmine
ab,
Andrew P.
Abbott
c and
Carmine
D'Agostino
*b
aDipartimento di Scienze Chimiche e Farmaceutiche, Università di Ferrara, Via Luigi Borsari, 46, I-44121 Ferrara, Italy
bDepartment of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Science, The University of Manchester, The Mill, Sackville Street, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK. E-mail: carmine.dagostino@manchester.ac.uk
cSchool of Chemistry, University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK
First published on 20th January 2021
Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) have emerged as an alternative to ionic liquids (ILs). DESs share with ILs some appealing features, such as low vapor pressure, capability to dissolve reagents insoluble in common organic solvents, and the possibility to tune the overall pH of the medium by replacing one of the constituents of the mixture. Furthermore, DESs can be prepared by combining molecules that come from natural sources (i.e., glycerol, glucose), making them biodegradable. DESs have already been used for a variety of reactions and protocols since they were reported for the first time by A. P. Abbott, G. Capper, D. L. Davies, R. K. Rasheed and V. Tambyrajah, Chem. Commun., 2003, 70, and among the reactions studied, organic oxidation has recently gained much attention. In particular, the recyclability of these ionic compounds makes it possible to achieve anchoring of organic oxidants, such as TEMPO and peroxydisulfate, directly onto one species of the DES mixture components. In addition, their solubility properties play a crucial role in organic oxidation since DESs have the ability to dissolve both organic lipophilic and hydrophilic species, making the oxidation of organic compounds mediated by hydrogen peroxide more efficient. Herein we report the state of the art of this developing field, focusing on the benefits of substituting common organic solvents with DESs, especially in terms of sustainability, enhancement of reactivity, and recyclability.
Early-generation ILs were formed by metals such as aluminium, tin and zinc and these were used in part as liquid catalysts for Lewis acid-catalyzed reactions. When the reagents and products were liquids then these were effectively solvent-free processes. Further research was then carried out to find metal-free alternatives, which maintained the required solvent properties, and a new class of ILs was designed by combining metal-free cations, mainly imidazolium analogues, with several coordinating and non-coordinating anions such as Cl−, BF4−, PF6− and NTf2−.8 While these have been proposed as green solvents, the fact that they are toxic, expensive to produce, and do not in many cases easily biodegrade has negated many opinions of their green credentials.9
The term ionic liquid was initially rigorously applied to systems that only contained ionic species which melted below 100 °C, but this definition has slowly been relaxed to include a wider range of fluids where ionic character tends to dominate solvent–solute interactions.10 Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are just one of these ion-dominated systems which have been found to be useful for a variety of applications. DESs are easily formed by mixing the components, usually an ammonium salt and a hydrogen bond donor (HBD). DESs have the toxicological properties of the two components and so the choice of benign starting materials can produce materials of low toxicity. The majority of these components are low-cost and biodegradable. Many can be extracted from biomass, increasing their sustainability credentials.11 Among the ammonium salts, choline chloride (ChCl) is one of the most commonly used components. It is used on a large scale in a variety of commodity products including as an animal feed additive as it is a pro-vitamin. It is therefore biodegradable, available at low cost, has low toxicity and can be accessible from biomass. Choline chloride forms a eutectic mixture when blended with a HBD such as urea, glucose and oxalic acid. The addition of the HBDs decreases the lattice energy of both homocouples, reducing the freezing point. In recent years, a plethora of HBDs have been reported in the literature, producing a large library of ChCl-based DESs that covers a wide spectrum of physical and chemical properties. In addition, several alternatives to ChCl have been presented and the tuning of the two components seems to be the key to create the suitable medium required for each particular process. Some examples of salts and HBDs are summarized in Table 1.12
While the first definition of DESs involved quaternary ammonium salt and hydrogen bond donor mixtures, they can be more generally described as mixtures of Brønsted and Lewis acids and bases. In all these systems strong hydrogen bonds develop and these deviate from ideal mixtures, resulting in a significant depression of freezing point. Similar mixtures of Brønsted and Lewis acids and bases are commonly found in nature and the term natural DESs has been coined, although this should only be applied to naturally occurring mixtures rather than those synthesized from naturally occurring starting materials.13
Table 2 lists the different types of Brønsted and Lewis acid and base mixtures which have been studied together with examples of the components used.
Eutectic | Acid | Base |
---|---|---|
1 | Lewis | Lewis |
MClx M = Zn, Sn, Fe,14 Al,15 Ga,16 In (ref. 17) | R4NCl | |
2 | Lewis | Lewis |
MClx·yH2O, M = Cr, Co, Cu, Ni, Fe (ref. 18) | R4NCl | |
3 | Brønsted | Lewis |
RZ, Z = CONH2, COOH, OH (ref. 19) | R4NCl | |
4 | Lewis | Lewis |
MClx or MClx·yH2O M = Al,20 Zn,21 Cr (ref. 22) | RZ, Z = CONH2, COOH, OH | |
5 | Brønsted | Lewis |
ROH RZ, Z = COOH (ref. 23) | RZ, Z = CONH2, COOH, OH |
Generally, an appreciable depression of the freezing point is observed and the magnitude of that depression is related to the strength of the bond formed between the two components, i.e. AlCl3 will exhibit a greater depression of freezing point than an alcoholic HBD such as glucose.
DESs have been used in numerous applications, such as for metal–organic framework (MOF) synthesis, nanoparticle preparation and gasoline desulfurization and as a medium for organic reactions.11b,24,25 Among organic reactions, oxidation reactions are well-known to be fundamental transformations in both industry and academia due to their capability to turn inert molecules into more reactive analogues prone to undergo further transformations. For example, hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) in free radical halogenation is a well-known protocol to prepare chlorinated solvents (chloroform, hexachlorobutadiene and dichloromethane) starting from fossil resources;26 ozonolysis is generally employed to fragment alkynes to prepare carboxylic acids,27 and the hydroxylation of the C–H bond is used to convert lipophilic compounds into hydrophobic analogues for environmental and pharmaceutical purposes (Scheme 1).28
It is clear, by looking at the structure of the HBDs capable of forming room-temperature DESs that molecules able to sequestrate the halide anion by a strong hydrogen bond are good candidates (urea, 2,2,2-trifluoroacetamide, levulinic acid, xylitol, D-sorbitol, etc.). In the context of organic reactions, the capability of the solvent to remain liquid at low temperatures is sometimes crucial in order to minimize the side reaction pathways. Among the physical properties, vapor pressure is closely related to environmental concerns. Solvents exhibiting a low vapor pressure can be more easily separated from much more volatile reaction species, hence recovered. This makes DESs ideal from this perspective since they have a negligible vapor pressure.
It has been shown that molecular liquids are heterogeneous with DESs. Water is found to form a microemulsion when mixed with DESs using dynamic light scattering and NMR spectroscopy.30b,32 This has been shown to be important for the electropolymerization of aniline and could control the mechanism of other reactions in mixed media.33
DES | pH | π* | α | β |
---|---|---|---|---|
1ChCl:1 oxalic acid | 1.32 | — | — | — |
1ChCl:1 malonic acid | 2.39 | — | — | — |
1ChCl:1 citric | 2.84 | — | — | — |
1ChCl:2 ethylene glycol | 6.89 | 0.96 ± 0.001 | 1.02 ± 0.02 | 0.33 ± 0.007 |
1ChCl:2 glycerol | 7.50 | 0.96 ± 0.04 | 1.04 ± 0.06 | 0.32 ± 0.01 |
1ChCl:2 urea | 8.91 | 0.98 ± 0.02 | 1.05 ± 0.02 | 0.30 ± 0.04 |
Recently the dissolution behavior of a variety of d- and p-block metal oxides was studied in DESs and it was found that for non-coordinating acids the solubility of the metal oxides was directly correlated with the acid strength as the proton acts as an oxygen acceptor. This understanding of DES pH should be directly transferrable to an understanding of organic reactivity.
The following sections provide an overview of the state of the art of organic oxidations performed in DESs. Through selected examples found in the most recent literature, we highlight the benefits of substituting volatile organic solvents with DESs, not only in terms of overall sustainability achieved but also in terms of improved efficiency and recyclability.
Scheme 2 Cellulose conversion into gluconic acid catalyzed by FeCl3 proposed by Mu et al.40 |
The authors prepared several DESs by mixing FeCl3 with different HBDs (ethylene glycol (EG), malonic acid, glycine and xylitol, to mention some), obtaining DESs with low viscosity and good conductivity when compared to other common DESs. Furthermore, these DESs exhibited a relatively high acidity, a crucial feature to promote the first step of the reaction, that is, the hydrolysis of cellulose into monomeric glucose. The temperature effect was investigated as well, and it was found that the best conditions in terms of conversion and selectivity were achieved using FeCl3–EG as a DES at 120 °C. Full conversion was achieved in one hour with a 52.7% yield of gluconic acid that can be simply collected by filtration due to its insolubility in the medium after cooling.
Despite the DESs used exhibiting a low freezing point (−55 °C to −66 °C), high temperatures were required in order to increase the selectivity; the concentration of cellulose played an important role as well, as shown in Fig. 1.
Fig. 1 Temperature (A), reaction time (B) and concentration effect (C) on the yield of reaction and recycling test (D). Reproduced from ref. 40 with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Among the oxidation reactions catalyzed by FeCl3, oxidation of toluene into benzaldehyde is another important key transformation in the chemical industry, toluene being the cheapest and primary source of aromatic compounds. Unfortunately, the selective partial oxidation still remains a great challenge, partly due to the more favorable tendency of the aldehyde to undergo overoxidation to benzoic acid. Operationally this requires performing the reaction while keeping the concentration of toluene very high.42 Guajardo and co-workers reported a protocol to convert toluene into benzaldehyde with hydrogen peroxide in DESs.43 Despite hydrogen peroxide being often recognized as a green reactant, it is poorly soluble in organic solvents and, in some cases, the reaction must be performed under a PTC (phase transfer catalysis) regime, with water having a detrimental effect on the selectivity by promoting the oxidation of benzaldehyde into the undesirable benzoic acid. It is well-known that ILs allow the capture of water formed, decreasing the side reaction.44 The work disclosed by Guajardo represents an alternative in which the more desirable DESs are used instead of ILs. Sodium tungstate (ST), iron(III) chloride (FeCl3), phosphotungstic acid (PT), and phosphomolybdic acid (PM) were tested as catalysts in different DESs. FeCl3 was selected as the most promising for the next screening step. The results of such solvent screening are summarized in Table 5.
DES | Cat | S Bzh [%] | S BzAc [%] | S BzCl [%] | S BzOH [%] | Conv [%] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a ChCl/urea. b ChCl/ethylene glycol. c ChCl is a DES obtained by mixing choline chloride and FeCl3. All reactions were performed at 60 °C. | ||||||
None | FeCl3 | 69 | 0 | 26.5 | 4.4 | 8.4 |
URAa | FeCl3 | 87 | 0 | 9 | 4 | 5 |
ETAb | FeCl3 | 73.5 | 13.9 | 10.1 | 2.5 | 18 |
ChClc | FeCl3 | 66.3 | 5.3 | 5.3 | 2.8 | 10.5 |
The authors studied the intrinsic catalytic activity of DES but no reactivity was observed. Iron(III) chloride was the only catalyst able to promote the oxidation, presumably by a Fenton-like mechanism. The ETA–FeCl3 system showed higher conversion (SBzh = 73%, conv = 18%) when compared to the neat system (SBzh = 69%, conv = 8.4%), but the URA–FeCl3 couple was able to give the highest selectivity, despite lower conversion (SBzh = 87%, conv = 5%). The authors investigated the temperature effect as well, observing conversion decreasing when reaching temperatures above 60 °C. This is probably due to the faster decomposition of hydrogen peroxide.
Iron-based catalysis finds several applications in organic synthesis and C–C bond formation reactions are undoubtedly among key transformations due to their intrinsic capability to increase the framework complexity of molecules. In particular, C–C bond formation through C–H activation is one of the great challenges in organic synthesis.45 One example is the mechanism of C(sp3)–H bond activation at the α-position of nitrogen, which is well-known and proceeds through two consequent single electron transfer (SET) reactions generating an iminium intermediate, as shown in Scheme 3.46
In this context, Zhang reported the synthesis of imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines promoted by CuFeO2 nanoparticles in DES.47 In 2016, Ramón et al. presented for the first time the cross-dehydrogenative coupling between 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline and phenylacetylene through C–H bond activation promoted by copper impregnated on magnetite (CuFeO2) in DES using atmospheric oxygen as the oxidant.48 The optimized reaction is shown in Scheme 4.
Scheme 4 Cross-dehydrogenative coupling reported by Ramón et al. through C–H bond activation promoted by copper impregnated on magnetite (CuFeO2) in ChCl:EG.48 |
To prove the essential role of DESs in the reaction the authors reported the reactivity in other common organic solvents. They observed that in all the cases the yield is lower than that in the reaction performed in the DES. Furthermore, a better selectivity was observed for the reaction in the DES as shown in Fig. 2.
Fig. 2 Comparison of yield of reaction and selectivity between DES and common organic solvents used for cross-dehydrogenative coupling performed by Ramón et al. Reproduced from ref. 48 with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
It is worth noting how the conductivity affects the reaction output following the trend observed by the authors. Fig. 3 shows the plot of the yield versus conductivity for different DESs tested. The trend can be reasonably explained by considering that the iminium intermediate is a charged ion and a better conductivity can enhance the movement of ions in the medium, explaining the increase in reactivity.
Fig. 3 Relationship between conductivity of the solvent and yield. Reproduced from ref. 48 with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Finally, the recyclability of the DES–catalyst mixture was tested as well; the results showed that the mixture could be reused up to ten times without appreciable decrease of reactivity.
Solubility issues are dominant in the design of an organic reaction and when among the reactants are present both lipophilic and hydrophilic compounds the reaction has to be often performed in the heterogeneous phase. Owing to the presence of organic chains, and the ionic nature, DESs are capable, after a suitable tailoring of their structures, of dissolving both lipophilic and hydrophilic substances.
FeCl3 also plays a crucial role in the synthesis of polymers in modern industrial chemistry. Some particular features of these materials are required nowadays, particularly in specific applications such as photoluminescence and electrochemistry.49 For example, poly(3-alkylthione)s are a class of important polymers that exhibit electro- and photo properties, which make them attractive for manufacturing of semiconductor polymers and dyes. FeCl3 oxidative polymerization is the protocol mainly adopted to prepare these polymers on a large-scale process, affording the desired product in high yield employing a low-cost catalyst.50
In 2016, Lee and co-workers reported an efficient protocol to polymerize alkylthiophenes using FeCl3 in DESs.51 In their previous work they reported a similar protocol employing an IL (1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluoroantimonate([BmIm][SbF6])) as a medium and they pointed out how replacing chloroform, the organic solvent commonly used, with the IL can have remarkable advantages in terms of polymer growth and yield.52 Aware of the general benefits gained by substituting ILs with DESs the authors decided to investigate the transformation in DESs. Table 6 reports the results, which show the remarkable advantages given by DESs (up to 100% yield and MW of 44179) compared to the outcome of the reaction performed in chloroform (yield = 87, MW = 34672), in addition to their well-known intrinsic economic and sustainable aspects.
FeCl3 (4 equiv.) reaction performed at 25 °C.
The highest Mw for poly-3-octylthiophene (P3OT) was obtained with ChCl/urea (Mw = 44179) when all the monomer is consumed. The highest reactivity was achieved using the DES (Y = 100% in 10 hours), whereby the yields in IL and chloroform were 99% and 87% in 48 hours, respectively. The temperature effect was investigated as well. As shown in Fig. 4, the polymerization rates in DESs or ILs were enhanced by increasing the temperature, which is not always possible when volatile solvents are used.
Fig. 4 Time–yield curves for P3OT prepared by FeCl3-catalyzed oxidative polymerization (a) at 25 °C in DESs, IL and chloroform and (b) at 50 °C in DESs and IL (▲: [Ch]Cl:U, ●: [Ch]Cl:U:TU, ▼: [BmIm][SbF6], ■: [Ch]Cl:F:TU, ◆: CHCl3). Reproduced from ref. 51 with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
The results summarized in Fig. 4 and Table 6 show that ChCl/urea is the most efficient solvent for the FeCl3-promoted oxidative polymerization of 3-octylthiophene, performing better than ILs and chloroform.
As mentioned in the introduction section, the intrinsic alkalinity of DESs is an important property that can be exploited in the design of organic reactions in DESs. An interesting correlation between the basicity parameter and reactivity in different DESs was observed. The yield of P3OT was seen to increase with decreasing values of pH. A similar effect has already been observed in the polymerization of 3OT performed in ILs. This finding indicates that the basicity of the solvent plays an important role in the FeCl3-catalyzed oxidative polymerization of 3OT.
Despite iron being more preferable than palladium for abundancy reasons, the latter remains ubiquitous in organic synthesis due to its versatility. In 2017, Ramón et al. reported the palladium catalyzed C–S bond formation in the presence of sodium metabisulfite as a SO2 source.53 Exploiting the ability of DESs to dissolve organic substrates, catalysts, ligands and the inorganic salt, the authors obtained an improvement when the reaction was performed in DESs instead of common organic solvents. The most promising DES was a mixture of ChCl and acetamide (1:2), whereas, 2-(dicyclohexylphosphaneyl)-1-phenylpyridin-1-ium chloride was selected as the best ligand. The reaction is shown in Scheme 5.
Scheme 5 Palladium-catalyzed C–S bond formation in DESs.53 |
In their studies, the authors focused on the C–S coupling, keeping the pentyl bromide as the electrophile and investigating the scope of the reaction by varying the aryl boronic acid. Aryl boronic acid-based compounds bearing both electron-withdrawing groups (EWGs) and electron-donating groups (EDGs) were tested, showing that the reactivity varies from poor to excellent (17–99%). Other electrophiles were tested among the most commonly used in organic synthesis such as Michael acceptors, alkyl chloride and aldehydes, showing the great flexibility of the protocol.
The recycling of the catalyst was also studied. The products were extracted using 2-MeTHF, a sustainable organic solvent, whereas the catalyst remained in the DES. The authors observed that the DES–catalyst medium could be reused three times without adding the catalyst, ligand or solvent.
Scheme 6 One-pot (2 steps) synthesis of 2,5-diarylpyrazynes in DES starting from 2-bromo-1-arylethan-1-ones.55 |
They started investigating the nucleophilic substitution of the halide in DES after considering that the reaction works very well in ILs and that it is classically performed in solvents with high polarity.57 The use of a ChCl/Gly eutectic mixture (1:2) at room temperature allowed obtaining the desired product in 4 h with 97% yield (Scheme 7).
Scheme 7 Synthesis of 2-azido-1-phenylethan-1-one from 2-bromo-1-phenylethan-1-one in ChCl/Gly.55 |
The authors suggested that a cooperative effect of the ChCl is involved in the mechanism, observing that in the presence of pure Gly the yield drops down to 23%. After examining the scope and limitation of this reaction, varying the substituents on the aromatic ring and finding that no detrimental effects were observed with both electron-poor and electron-rich rings, the authors carried out a subsequent investigation of the chemoselective reduction of the azido functional group. Classical reductive systems were tested such as Zn/ammonium formate, Zn/HCl, Zn/NH4Cl, Ph3P, and D-glucose/KOH without any significant results. The use of SnCl2·2H2O smoothly promoted the reduction of the azido group, whilst the subsequent use of Pd/C (1 mol%) in the presence of hydrogen (3 atm) promoted the dimerization/oxidation to 2,5 diphenylpyrazine, obtained in 89% yield (Scheme 8).
Scheme 8 Telescoped one-pot synthesis of 2,5-diphenylpyrazine in a ChCl/Gly deep eutectic mixture.55 |
Finally, the authors presented the scope and limitations of the telescoped one-pot synthesis tested using different bromide ketones as shown in Table 7.
The authors did not investigate the reuse of the DES, probably because the mixture, which was contaminated with palladium, necessary to trigger the next step, was not as efficient as the pure one for the nucleophilic substitution.
Continuing with the preparation of heteroaromatic compounds, pyrimidine is broadly recognized as a privileged scaffold for important drugs, which exhibit biological activities in several diseases. In addition, pyrimidine analogues find broad applications in polymer chemistry and materials science.58 A variety of protocols has been reported during these years on the preparation of pyrimidines. However, the reported methods often suffer from drawbacks such as the need to use rare or toxic metals as catalysts, expensive or moisture-sensitive starting materials, longer reaction times, harsh reaction conditions and poor recycling of the catalyst. Thus, new economical and environmentally friendly methods for the synthesis of substituted pyrimidines are much sought-after. Recently, Chaskar and co-workers disclosed a new and affordable method to prepare this class of molecules in DESs.59 The authors selected the reaction of 1,3-diphenyl-2-en-1-one with benzamidine hydrochloride as a model system (Scheme 9).
Scheme 9 Model reaction chosen for the preliminary study of the pyrimidine one-pot protocol in DESs reported by Chaskar et al.59 |
The authors investigated the reactivity by screening several common organic solvents such as EtOH, toluene, DMF and acetonitrile. They reported that the reaction affords the desired product up to 83% yield using a strong base such as NaH and NaOH at very high temperature (80–110 °C) in a reasonably short reaction time (1–2 hours). The reaction was seen to be more efficient in choline hydroxide (ChOH) (Table 8). In particular, in ChOH the reaction gave a yield of 90% in a shorter reaction time (30 min) and under milder conditions (60 °C) without strong bases as additive.
The recyclability of the DESs was also studied showing that it was possible to reuse the DES five times without any appreciable loss of activity (90% to 87%). The authors proposed a mechanism whereby ChOH seems to play a crucial role in promoting the reaction (Scheme 10).
Scheme 10 Proposed mechanism for the [3 + 3] tandem pyrimidine synthesis in ChOH.59 |
Regarding diazo-heterocyclic compounds, in 2016 Nagarajan and co-workers reported a metal-free DES-mediated cyclization strategy to prepare substituted and unsubstituted quinazolinones, well-known molecular scaffolds that can be further elaborated for the synthesis of various natural products and drugs.60 They screened several sugar-based DES mixtures such as citric acid/N,N′-dimethylurea, D-(−)-fructose/N,N′-dimethylurea, L-(+)-tartaric acid/N,N′-dimethylurea and mannose/N,N′-dimethylurea/NH4Cl employing anthranilamide and o-tolualdehyde as model substrates. L-(+)-tartaric acid/N,N′-dimethylurea (3:7) (F.P. 90 °C) was found to be the most promising DES for the reaction, affording the desired product in 78% yield. The reaction required to be performed in an open air atmosphere to allow the aromatization of the initially formed dihydroquinazolinone to quinazolinone through aerobic oxidation (Scheme 11).
Scheme 11 Dihydroquinazolinone one-pot synthesis in L-(+)-tartaric acid/N,N′-dimethylurea.60 |
The robustness and the limitations of the methods were tested by varying the substituents on the reagents. Interestingly, the authors proved the utility of the protocol in preparing APIs (active pharmaceutical ingredients) (Scheme 12).61
Scheme 12 Dihydroquinazolinone derivate elaboration towards pharmaceutically relevant compounds reported by Nagarajan et al.60 |
Pyrroles are another class of molecules of interest in several areas of chemistry and materials science. They have found promising applications as organic semiconductors and in OLED (organic light-emitting diode) applications.62 Chaskar and co-workers reported a one-pot method employing DESs for the synthesis of these important scaffolds.63 The one-pot procedure consists of a [3 + 2] cycloaddition between a chalcone and a isocyanoacetate promoted by a copper(I) salt followed by aerobic oxidation to access the tri-substituted pyrrole (Scheme 13).
Scheme 13 The one-pot protocol disclosed by Chaskar for the preparation of tri-substituted pyrroles.63 |
In the reported paper, the authors showed the benefit of moving from classical to DES-based solvents. The reaction in DESs proceeded faster and under milder conditions when compared with the use of classical organic solvents (THF, DMF, MeOH) that all require strong bases to trigger the reaction. The authors investigated the scope of the reaction as well, as shown in Table 9.
The protocol was shown to be robust and applicable for both electron-withdrawing and electron-donating groups bearing on the aryl moiety of the olefin. Replacing the aryl moiety with the alkyl onto the ketone did not change dramatically the reactivity. The recycling test showed that the DESs could be reused five times without loss of reactivity. The mechanism proposed by the authors was also reported (Scheme 14), whereby the role of the ChOH is thought to be the deprotonation of the isocyanoacetate in order to generate the dipole for the cyclization.
Scheme 14 Proposed mechanism for the one-pot pyrrole synthesis in ChOH.63 |
C–N and C–C bond oxidation by atmospheric oxygen is easy to observe when a re-aromatization occurs. However, in other cases a stronger oxidant is required. Oxidation by hypervalent iodine compounds is one of the most used methods to oxidize selectively organic compounds. This class of reactions has been widely used in research laboratories since the first reactions, under mild conditions, were discovered by Dess and Martin.64 Within this class, o-iodoxybenzoic acid is one of the most prominent and interesting reactants. It is one of the cheapest hypervalent iodine reagents and it can be reused by treating the derived reduced by-product with aqueous oxone, after recovery and separation by the crude reaction. In 2017, Sharma and co-workers, intrigued by previously reported studies on oxidation in DESs, decided to explore the oxidation of primary amines into imines promoted by IBX (2-iodoxybenzoic acid),65 extending the concept to the Ugi reaction, a one-pot process featuring reorganization of imine, organic acid and isocyanide to obtain bis-amide analogues in situ. Selected results about the first step of the Ugi collected by Sharma are summarized in Table 10.
The authors found that the addition of an additive (benzoic acid) is crucial to obtain the desired product. Otherwise, the absence of the acid afforded a mixture of the corresponding aldehyde and nitrile. It is worth noting that substitution of classical organic solvents (entries 1, 2 and 3) with DESs significantly boosted the reactivity (entry 4 in Table 10). The authors rationalized this behavior, observing a better solubility of IBX in the DES compared to some organic solvents (DCM, CH3CN, toluene). After finding the optimized condition for the oxidation, the authors investigated its implementation in the Ugi reaction. Ugi reaction involves the condensation of a carbonyl and an amine in order to generate an imine as an intermediate followed by the addition of isocyanide and a carboxylic acid. Some examples are shown in Scheme 15.
Scheme 15 Selected examples of the Ugi reaction performed in deep eutectic solvents.65 |
Phenylamine and benzylamine bearing electron-donating substituents (p-methoxy) reacted under standard conditions and afforded the target product in very good yield (82% and 80%, respectively). The authors reported that the reaction remains effective when varying the substituents on both the acid and the isocyanide species. A complete study was performed to investigate the reusability of the DESs. Water was added to the reaction mixture to separate the corresponding reduced IBX and the reaction products. The water was then removed by distillation and the DES was reused five times without any significant loss in reactivity. The desired products and the iodosylbenzoic acid (IBA, reduced by IBX) were separated by dissolving the crude product in ethyl acetate followed by filtration.
Fast and selective oxidation occurs smoothly not only for heterocyclic compounds. Recently, Capriati and co-workers disclosed a one-pot methodology to prepare α- and β-hydroxy-phosphine oxides in a very short reaction time (Scheme 16).66
Scheme 16 α- and β-hydroxy-phosphine oxide synthesis through a one-pot two-step protocol disclosed by Capriati et al.66 |
The protocol consists of three steps. Firstly, the reactive lithium phosphide is generated by adding 1 equivalent of n-BuLi to a solution of phosphine in DES (ChCl:Gly, 1:2); the electrophile (epoxy or aldehyde) is then added, affording either the α- or β-hydroxy-phosphine analogue, which spontaneously undergoes oxidation at the phosphorus centre in excellent yield (up to 95%). Surprisingly, the reaction works in DESs containing a HBD despite the lithium phosphide being well-known to be sensitive to moisture and incompatible with protic solvents. The authors investigated the fate of the lithium phosphide in the DES and observed a drastic decrease of reactivity by increasing the time lag between the n-BuLi addition and the electrophile addition. This suggests a detrimental effect of the solvent which is however not significant if the addition occurs fast.
Scheme 17 Choline peroxydisulfate prepared by Shankarling et al. The oxidative species is part of the DES (peroxydisulfate).67 |
The authors chose benzyl alcohol as a model reactant and they found the optimal conditions using 2 equiv. of DES in water (2 M). The reaction occurred more easily under ultrasound conditions (5 min) compared with thermal conditions (30 min). They also compared their protocol with standard protocols reported in the literature (H2O2 and Fe(DS)3, NaOCl, and FeCl3/HNO3) and showed that their protocol was more efficient and sustainable.68 The scope of the reaction was also investigated, proving the robustness of the procedure (Scheme 18).
Scheme 18 Choline peroxydisulfate-promoted oxidation of benzyl alcohol derivates to aldehydes in ultrasound.67 |
Fig. 5 shows the energy required (kJ) for the oxidation of benzyl alcohol per unit weight of the material consumed/obtained (g) under thermal (conventional) and ultrasound conditions. The total energy required per unit weight benzaldehyde synthesis was 0.958 kJ g−1 for the thermal method and 0.125 kJ g−1 for the ultrasound method, proving that the latter is more sustainable for this reaction.
Fig. 5 Yield (%) and energy (kJ g−1) comparison using thermal and ultrasound methods in benzyl alcohol oxidation promoted by ChPS·H2O. Reproduced from ref. 67 with permission from American Chemical Society. |
In general, the selective oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes in DESs is a topic that is currently attracting much interest.69 The group of Zhao reported a selective oxidation of both primary and secondary alcohols to aldehydes and ketones promoted by TEMPO supported onto a DES employing oxygen as a sacrificial reactant.70 The authors reported the synthesis of the modified DES as well (Scheme 19).
Scheme 19 Preparation of DES-supported TEMPO reported by Zhao et al.70 |
The protocol is rather simple. The TEMPO is treated with a di-bromide alkyl chain in the presence of a strong base (NaH), then a long-chain tertiary amine is added to the resulting intermediate to give the quaternary salt that mixed with the urea affords the desired DESs with the anchored TEMPO.
This DES was tested in the aerobic oxidation of benzyl alcohol in the presence of several metallic co-catalysts with air at ambient pressure (Table 11).
Reaction conditions: benzyl alcohol 10 mmol, 1.25% DES–TEMPO, 3% salt(s), atmospheric oxygen pressure.
The co-catalyst is crucial to trigger the reaction and in its absence the conversion after 1 hour was below 1%. Among the most used metals in the TEMPO oxidation Fe(NO2)3·6H2O was the most active, boosting the reactivity to 99% conversion, whereas the selectivity remained the same as that of the other entries.
The applicability of the protocol was studied by testing more than 20 types of alcohols, both primary and secondary, showing a broad range of application with conversion over 90% and almost full selectivity towards the aldehyde or ketone products. A recyclability study was reported as shown in Table 12. The system solvent/catalyst was reused up to five times without significant loss of reactivity, although fresh co-catalyst (Fe(NO2)3·6H2O) had to be added after each run. After the seventh cycle, the conversion decreased more drastically and the DES-supported TEMPO could not be used again.
Run | Conversion [%] | TOF [h−1] | Selec [%] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | >99 | 26.4 | >99 |
2 | >99 | 26.4 | >99 |
3 | >99 | 26.4 | >99 |
4 | >99 | 26.4 | >99 |
5 | >99 | 26.4 | >99 |
6 | 85 | 22.7 | >99 |
7 | 66 | 17.6 | >99 |
8 | 27 | 7.2 | >99 |
In 2018, the Nagarkar's group reported the oxidation of aldehydes to carboxylic acids using H2O2 in DESs.72 The authors used benzaldehyde as a model substrate and found that by maintaining the reaction temperature at 50 °C in ChCl/urea the number of equivalents of hydrogen peroxide dramatically affected the reactivity. The conversion was seen to increase from 38% to 100% when moving from 1 equiv. to 1.5, respectively. Keeping the reaction running for more than 2 hours resulted in a drop of yield due to degradation of the benzoic acid previously formed. A comparative study showing the effect of replacing common solvents with the DESs was performed (Table 13). The recycling experiments showed that the activity within the DESs reaction media remained the same for five cycles.
The preparation of organic acids, especially those used as bulk chemicals, from renewable resources is a very attractive topic nowadays. In this context, maleic acid and fumaric acid along with their anhydrides are well-known as important C4 chemical intermediates within the chemical industry, such as resins, lubricant additives, surface coatings and pharmaceuticals. In 2013 Yan and co-workers disclosed a protocol to convert furfural, one of the most important intermediates which comes from lignocellulose, into maleic and fumaric acid employing ChCl–oxalic acid DESs as both solvent and catalyst (Scheme 20).73
Scheme 20 Furfural conversion into fumaric acid and maleic acid promoted by hydrogen peroxide and ChCl–oxalic acid DES.73 |
Carboxylic acids play a crucial role in the oxidation of furfural due to their capability to be oxidized to organic peracids by H2O2 and then efficiently oxidize furfural to maleic acid and fumaric acid. Based on this observation, the authors designed a DES with one organic acid that can catalyze the reaction. They selected oxalic acid as the key component of the DES due to its strong acidity (pKa = 1.13). A conversion of 100% of furfural into maleic and fumaric acid was achieved in six hours under mild conditions (50–60 °C).
In 2014 the Azizi group reported a very fast and selective oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols promoted by N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) in DESs.74 The reaction was observed to be faster in DESs than in common organic solvents when 1-phenylethanol was used as a model starting material (Table 14).
The authors found that the ChCl/urea DES was a more efficient medium compared to other solvent media, remarking the absence of overoxidative side-products. Interestingly, the high chemoselectivity of the protocol towards primary alcohols was proved in an experiment in which a mixture of benzyl alcohol and 1-phenylethanol was used (Scheme 21).
Scheme 21 Chemoselective test for the oxidation of alcohols promoted by NBS in ChCl/urea DES.74 |
The authors explored the scope of the reaction using different aryl boronic acid compounds by varying the substituent on the aromatic ring. Electron-rich aryl boronic acids exhibited high yield (90 to 96%), showing complete consumption of the reagents in five minutes, whereas electron-poor boronic acids required a longer reaction time (15 minutes) with lower yield (82 to 90%). The authors proposed a mechanism to explain the role of the DES as the catalyst (Scheme 22) in which the DES activates the hydrogen peroxide by polarization of the peroxide bond through hydrogen bonding.
Scheme 22 Proposed mechanism for the oxidation of aryl boronic acids promoted by hydrogen peroxide and ChCl/urea.75 |
A similar protocol using ChCl/HFIP (Scheme 23) was reported, studying in this case the reuse of the catalyst, which showed a reusability for five cycles.76
Scheme 23 Preparation of the ChCl/HFIP.76 |
■ Enhancement in reactivity.
■ Easier recyclability.
■ Possibility to bind organic reactants, such as oxidative reagents, and catalyst functionalities to the DES framework.
■ Easier separation and purification of reaction products.
■ Possibility to operate under a wide temperature range.
Whilst some issues remain for a much wider use at a larger scale, such as the high viscosity of some DESs, commercial applications seem to be on the doorstep and we believe that their use for organic oxidations will lead to new processes for the manufacture of chemical commodities.
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